I'm reading up on these patriarchs from before Mosaic Law and it appears they all had numerous wives. Abraham founded several nations thru several wives. Jacob had 4 wives, etc etc etc.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Ken Starr and his homophobic agenda.
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Berzerker View PostAggie and Straybow, good debate. But I have a question: this two into one is either just mystical BS or it refers to the children, true?
Well, not BS, but just a nice way of saying the two have committed to sharing their lives and they kept the commitment.
Any account of this passage that doesn't want to make Jesus merely assert, and wants to account for the fact that the Pharisees are "testing" him, has to assign some genuine meaning to the "one flesh stuff". To say that it is merely figurative robs it of any factual power it would have to support Jesus contentions about divorce.
Yet Jesus allowed divorce for infidelity, but Adam and Eve didn't divorce at all, much less over infidelity. That was "from the beginning", not divorce for infidelity.
But "from the beginning" (ἀπ᾽ ἀρχῆς ) here most likely refers back to verse 4, where it is referring to the creation of Adam and Eve.
What is clear is that Jesus is rejecting the Mosaic Law because he sees it as a degeneration. But the only reason he gives for this is the naturalistic "one flesh" explanation. If we want to know why he allows for divorce in the case of adultery, we need to explain it in those terms, because nothing else is offered.
Again, in this passage Jesus is being tested by the Pharisees. Having him simply blurt out his own convictions without any real supporting reasons would make him look like a goof.
Polygamy doesn't violate that idea, the children of each relationship are still the flesh of two into one...
Btw, God didn't marry Adam and Eve... I cant see where God said much of anything about their relationship until the serpent taught them (Eve) about procreation and God saw Eve's pregnancy.
If you want to justify polygamy, then you need to show why verses 4-6 are not to be taken literally, and at the same time how this doesn't make Jesus simply a BAMer.
But if you take versus 4-6 literally, then "one flesh" has to be assigned a literal meaning as well (just how that works is not quite clear, but it is required on pain of making his initial response nonsense).
But if the two people literally become one flesh, then a polygamous marriage is going to make three people become one flesh (by the law of identity), but that isn't allowed, because the natural basis of marriage is a union of opposites, and not a same sex union.
I think Jesus (or whomever wrote this) saw this quite clearly, and thus concluded that the Mosaic Law was degenerate. Something like this seems necessary to me to prevent making him look like a liar and a fraud.
I don't see the big deal here. It's pretty clear from other cases that Jesus was quite capable of criticizing earlier Jewish traditions and claiming that they had abandoned the one true way. That's because what he is doing is quite novel.
The Christianity of the Gospels is quite different from the religion of the Old Testament. It's much more sophisticated and humane. The only people who have a problem with this are those who, for religious reasons, want to assert that everything in the Bible is really consistent. Even Jesus himself probably wanted to believe that he was the true bearer of the torch. But he wasn't. Like Mohammed, he was a religious innovator who worked within a tradition, but created something new.Only feebs vote.
Comment
-
An atheist and a Catholic ripping into a protestant for failing to interpret scripture literally?
What is Poly coming to?Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
"Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
2015 APOLYTON FANTASY FOOTBALL CHAMPION!
Comment
-
I'm not any of those BenWell, I was baptized a Catholic and did go to catechism (zzz) This stuff is fascinating, not ripping. I'm more into the ancient mythology than theological disputes but this debate links the two nicely.
AggieIt isn't even clear that some sort of marriage ceremony is required. The "one flesh" remark obviously refers to sexual congress.But the passage unambiguously states that the two people become of the same flesh. No child is mentioned. When it says "let them not be separated", it isn't talking about a child.
If you want to justify polygamy, then you need to show why verses 4-6 are not to be taken literally, and at the same time how this doesn't make Jesus simply a BAMer.
But if the two people literally become one flesh, then a polygamous marriage is going to make three people become one flesh (by the law of identity), but that isn't allowed, because the natural basis of marriage is a union of opposites, and not a same sex union.
Comment
-
But polygamy is a union of opposites and a polygamous marriage is still between a man and a woman. The fact other wives are already married to the guy is irrelevant unless he's divorcing one or more without cause.Only feebs vote.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Berzerker View PostAggie and Straybow, good debate. But I have a question: this two into one is either just mystical BS or it refers to the children, true? Well, not BS, but just a nice way of saying the two have committed to sharing their lives and they kept the commitment.
Yet Jesus allowed divorce for infidelity, but Adam and Eve didn't divorce at all, much less over infidelity. That was "from the beginning", not divorce for infidelity. Polygamy doesn't violate that idea, the children of each relationship are still the flesh of two into one... Btw, God didn't marry Adam and Eve... I cant see where God said much of anything about their relationship until the serpent taught them (Eve) about procreation and God saw Eve's pregnancy.(\__/) Save a bunny, eat more Smurf!
(='.'=) Sponsored by the National Smurfmeat Council
(")_(") Smurf, the original blue meat! © 1999, patent pending, ® and ™ (except that "Smurf" bit)
Comment
-
Originally posted by Agathon View PostBut the passage unambiguously states that the two people become of the same flesh. No child is mentioned. When it says "let them not be separated", it isn't talking about a child.
...But if you take versus 4-6 literally, then "one flesh" has to be assigned a literal meaning as well (just how that works is not quite clear, but it is required on pain of making his initial response nonsense).
But if the two people literally become one flesh, then a polygamous marriage is going to make three people become one flesh (by the law of identity), but that isn't allowed, because the natural basis of marriage is a union of opposites, and not a same sex union.
"Flesh of my flesh" is hugely significant in a culture where family and lineage is everything. The marriage covenant is to be of greater moment than the parent to adult child relationship, not a casual thing cast aside at any offense.(\__/) Save a bunny, eat more Smurf!
(='.'=) Sponsored by the National Smurfmeat Council
(")_(") Smurf, the original blue meat! © 1999, patent pending, ® and ™ (except that "Smurf" bit)
Comment
-
The marriage covenant is to be of greater moment than the parent to adult child relationship, not a casual thing cast aside at any offense.Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
"Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
2015 APOLYTON FANTASY FOOTBALL CHAMPION!
Comment
-
Originally posted by Berzerker View Postthat would mean monogamy was the practice from the beginning and it wasn't, the patriarchs pre-date Mosaic Law and all I see in the OT from God about the subject is repeated endorsements of polygamy.Only feebs vote.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View PostWhat you fail to grasp is the significance of sexual congress. I guess sleeping with someone is trivial in your world?(\__/) Save a bunny, eat more Smurf!
(='.'=) Sponsored by the National Smurfmeat Council
(")_(") Smurf, the original blue meat! © 1999, patent pending, ® and ™ (except that "Smurf" bit)
Comment
-
Originally posted by Straybow View PostNo, the passage reiterates the phrase used in Genesis of the first marriage. To say you are interpreting it "literally," and then say that the flesh isn't really "literal," nor is the "one" literal in any measurable way but some metaphysical oneness... that is utter nonsense. That's where the gentile church fathers (who were somewhat more gullible about metphysical gobbledygook) went wrong.
In this passage, the relationship must be regarded as having some natural status which supports his contention on divorce, or Jesus' comments are fraudulent, and he's just BAMing rather than giving reasons, and the participle peirazontes makes no real sense when applied to the Pharisees.
You aren't even reading the text in the original language (Greek primacy), so your opinion is already based on someone else's translation, and I have demonstrated to you why it makes your interpretation wrong. English translations have trouble with the Greek sentence structure and with translating certain Greek words, the most notorious example being λόγος in the opening sentence of the Gospel of John.
I have no problem with saying that the ancient Hebrews didn't believe the same thing as Jesus believes here. In fact, that's part of my argument. The church fathers were right about what Jesus said, but wrong if they assumed it was consistent with everything in the Old Testament. God's #1 carpenter was a religious innovator. There might be religious reasons for trying to make the entire Bible consistent, but that's a different story.
You are trying for religious reasons to make the text fit with your preconceived beliefs. I am not religious in any way, and just look at what the text says and the language it is written in and historical beliefs about the sexes that were current at the time.
Look, we have absolutely no idea who wrote this book, and all we have to go on in the end is the text.Only feebs vote.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Agathon View PostIn this passage, the relationship must be regarded as having some natural status which supports his contention on divorce, or Jesus' comments are fraudulent, and he's just BAMing rather than giving reasons, and the participle peirazontes makes no real sense when applied to the Pharisees.
The problem with the Pharisees in Jesus' day, and the patriarchs in their day, is not that they failed to understand, but that they deliberately voided it with escape clauses and oh-so-clever work-arounds. For Abraham and Sarah, the handmaid thing was the custom of pagan tribes and they convinced themselves God would work through that. But God didn't. And so on, through story after story.
I have no problem with saying that the ancient Hebrews didn't believe the same thing as Jesus believes here. In fact, that's part of my argument. The church fathers were right about what Jesus said, but wrong if they assumed it was consistent with everything in the Old Testament. God's #1 carpenter was a religious innovator. There might be religious reasons for trying to make the entire Bible consistent, but that's a different story.
You are trying for religious reasons to make the text fit with your preconceived beliefs. I am not religious in any way, and just look at what the text says and the language it is written in and historical beliefs about the sexes that were current at the time.(\__/) Save a bunny, eat more Smurf!
(='.'=) Sponsored by the National Smurfmeat Council
(")_(") Smurf, the original blue meat! © 1999, patent pending, ® and ™ (except that "Smurf" bit)
Comment
-
You still haven't answered the argument. Your interpretation makes Jesus a sophist, and his answers provide no real backup for his eventual view on the permissibility of divorce. Your view makes the entire exchange a non-sequitur. Presumably the Catholic church isn't as stupid as yours. "One flesh" has to be more than metaphorical. Whatever meaning you assign to it, has to be more than metaphorical. The text demands that in order to make sense. Of course it's a weird idea, but the Bible is full of weird ideas.
Why on earth should your opinion carry any weight when you can't actually read the book you are making claims about? How many times do I have to instruct you that your translation is borked? How many times do you have to ignore that fact because you can't read what the text says? If you want to be taken seriously, then learn to read the book you are attempting to interpret.
Go away and spend a couple of years learning to read Greek. Then you can come back and waste some more of my time.
As if you care about anything more than parroting the discredited interpretations of whatever church it is you belong to.Only feebs vote.
Comment
Comment